Our formats
Shibari event formats
Beginner Rope Jam
Never tried shibari before? This is the best place to start.
We begin with a short introduction circle so everyone can get to know each other and feel more comfortable in the space. After that, we spend about 1.5–2 hours exploring the basics of rope through a mix of simple exercises, demonstrations, and discussion.
We'll talk about safety, different types of rope, tension and countertension, rope handling, and ways to interact and play with a partner through rope. There is plenty of time to ask questions, experiment, and learn by doing.
The final hour is open practice and conversation. Some people continue experimenting with what they've learned, while others relax, chat, and share impressions from the evening.
You can come with a partner or on your own. Ropes are provided, and no previous experience is needed.
Shibari workshop
Shibari Workshop is a focused learning format dedicated to specific rope techniques, concepts, or approaches.
The class usually includes demonstration, explanation, guided practice, feedback, and time for questions. Depending on the topic, it may cover fundamentals, floorwork, suspensions, transitions, communication, aesthetics, or other aspects of shibari.
The workshop is designed for active practice and direct exchange with the teacher in a structured and supportive environment.
Performance night
Performance Night is an evening dedicated to live shibari performances. The program may include performances by local practitioners as well as invited guests from other cities or countries.
It is not a workshop or a regular rope jam. The main focus is to watch the performances, support the artists, and have space for discussion, questions, and exchange after the shows.
Peer rope
Peer Rope
Peer Rope is a small community learning format built around a Telegram chat and two in-person meetings each month.
In the chat, participants share questions, discoveries, videos, ties, practice notes, and ideas for future meetings. Based on these discussions, we choose a topic and prepare the next session.
Each meeting combines a discussion part and a practical part. Sometimes we analyze videos, sometimes we explore a technical topic, and sometimes we simply experiment together. The exact focus depends on the interests of the group.
You can join with a partner or come on your own. There is no fixed curriculum and no pressure to participate in any particular way — you are welcome to practice, observe, ask questions, share experiences, and find your own pace.
Peer Rope is a community-driven format and will continue to evolve through feedback, suggestions, and participant initiative.